Saturday, June 7, 2008

The Burma Bashing Never Ends at the Boston Globe

O.K.

First of all, the Boston Globe provides this story on the website
....

"Burma refugee camps empty out as junta shuts down shelters"

.... while I get this in my newspaper
:

"Cyclone destroys trees in Myanmar's main city"

What's with the censorship, Globe?

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — .... When Cyclone Nargis ripped through Myanmar's largest city last month, its 120 mph winds snapped 100-year-old trees like matchsticks, wiping out much of Yangon's living link to its colonial past....

As Myanmar grapples with the tens of thousands of dead and many more homeless from the May 2-3 cyclone, it is coming to terms with another casualty: The loss of one of Asia's last colonial-era, leafy cities.

The Yangon Municipal Gardens Department said more than 10,000 trees were uprooted across Yangon, including at least 530 that were more than 50 years old.

Oh, the TREES are more important than the PEOPLE!

I see, agenda-pushing MSM!

Who wrote this? Some global-warming cultist?

"The cyclone was a terrible shock to me," said 83-year-old Khin Htway, a retired doctor who has lived her whole life in Yangon. "But to see so many trees that are older than I am uprooted in one fell swoop was devastating. They are irreplaceable."

So is a HUMAN LIFE and SOUL!!!!!

Back when the British built this city over a century ago and named it Rangoon, they paved wide boulevards lined with stately trees and created leafy suburbs of lakes and gardens.

Translation: COLONIALISM was BETTER, Burmese! Pffffffttt!

Towering rain trees, stately mahoganies, banyan and Burmese rosewoods were scattered around Yangon's streets and parks, providing much-needed shade from the sweltering tropical sun. These top-heavy trees were especially vulnerable to the cyclone's fierce winds, said conservationist Aung Din, noting that many of those still standing are teak and eucalyptus, with deeper roots.

Under British rule, Burma — as the country was then called — was one of the wealthiest in Southeast Asia and the region's biggest producer of timber and rice.

Translation: COLONIALISM was BETTER, Burmese!

Talk about PUSHING an AGENDA! Pffffffttt!

At this point, the article is totally different from what is in the paper I'm looking at.

Just wanted you to know that.

Over the years, much of Myanmar's colonial past was wiped away by the military regimes that have ruled since 1962 and transformed the country into one of the poorest in the world. The current junta renamed the country Myanmar in 1989 and changed the capital's name to Yangon. In 2005, they relocated the capital to the newly built, isolated city of Naypyitaw in the north.

The xenophobic and reclusive generals blocked the outside world's influence and modernity, leaving Yangon with the dusty tranquility of another era. Its leafy charm stood in stark contrast to the traffic-clogged concrete jungles that sprung up in neighboring Southeast Asian capitals such as Bangkok, Jakarta and Manila.

Talk about bashing! And they never say that about the Israeli Zionists, do they?

I'm getting tired of the Zionist racism of AmeriKa's War Dailies, readers -- why I am skeptical of anything they write or how they present it!

They DID IT to themselves with this shit journalism!

World War II-era buses still ply the streets. Peeling pastel paint hangs from the once grand facades of neglected but sturdy colonial buildings. The old architecture survived the cyclone, unlike hundreds of the flimsy wooden homes of the poor, which were flattened.

Sounds like Katrina!

But with the loss of the trees, Yangon is a changed city. Many residents who visited the grounds of Yangon University after the storm came away in tears. The campus, which was full of stately old trees and was a favorite picnic spot, is now eerily bare.

"We used to sit under the big, shady trees to read and chat. I miss doing that," said Tin Moe Hlaing, 29, a masters student in international relations, while reading on a bench in the lobby of the history department.

Huh?

My impression of Burma from the Zionist MSM was that of military thugs beating monks, imprisoning CIA agents and the rest a bunch of poor dirt eaters.

Whadda ya' mean they got a UNIVERSITY?

Kandawgyi Lake, a large forest-like park across town, is similarly barren. "There were so many big trees around the beautiful lake," said Tun Ohn, 73, who operates a tour boat that was smashed in the storm. "Now, all that's left is a lot of fallen trees and debris."

With the cyclone causing most of its death and destruction in the Irrawaddy delta to the south, life in Yangon has mostly returned to normal. Crowds throng the city's markets and sidewalk stalls, and taxis ply the streets. Police direct cars at intersections because traffic signals are still broken.

Again, the MSM impression has been one of EVERYTHING at a stand still. WTF?!?!

Remember, this is NOT on the Globe's web site!

Women scurry across busy Strand Road, dodging cars and pedicabs, with rattan trays of dried fish or fresh produce balanced on their heads. Towering overhead, the golden domed Shwedagon Pagoda — the city's famed bell-shaped temple atop a hill — gleams in the sun and is spotlighted at night.

WTF?! Must be quite a site, huh?

Electricity has been restored in the more affluent city center, although some residents still lack telephone service.

Good thing America takes care of the poor first, then gets to those rich folk, right, 'murkns?

Do I even have to say it?

The city's trendy youth are again enjoying late nights of nocturnal fun.

Translation: The KIDS are PARTYING!!!

Leaving their traditional sarong-like longyis at home in favor of baggy jeans and baseball caps, their weekend nights are spent dancing at the Pioneer Club, where partygoers drink beer and gyrate to techno music. For some, returning to normal has meant restoring some of the fallen trees.

They almost sound -- dare I say it -- AMERICAN!

So WTF is OUR PROBLEM with Burma -- other than an unacceptable military dictatorship (as opposed to the ones we accept and ally with) and control of the drug trade routes?

At an intersection in northeastern Yangon, residents raised a huge banyan tree that had been uprooted by the storm and pieced back together a porcelain-tiled shrine at its base.

Banyan trees are sacred to Buddhists, who believe that Buddha attained enlightenment while sitting under one. In Myanmar, the venerable trees are believed to house spirits.

We ALL OUT to sit under a tree -- and END the WARS!!!!

"There were spirits in the trees around here," said Aye Aye San, a 45-year-old laborer who works at Yangon University. "I don't know where they are now."

Probably being evicted from a government shelter, right, Zionist MSM?